Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Estatblishing permanent Injury in a Maryland Personal Injury Case

Before you can establish that the effects of an injury are permanent you first need to establish that the injury was caused by this accident at issue. Typically this is accomplished by the timing of the onset of the complaints of pain and for some people diagnostic test confirming injury. Once you have established this causal connection you will may need expert testimony to establish that the effect of the injury is not likely to change. The only exception to this requirement for expert testimony to establish permanency is when the injury is of such a nature that common knowledge is sufficient to justify its probable permanent nature. For example in Cluster v Upton, 165 Md. 566 (1933), the issue of permanent injury was submitted to the jury without expert testimony where the plaintiff's finger, fractured in the accident, was still crooked 11 months after the accident.